HUMAN RESOURCES & STAFFING PLAN...institutional planning, the Human Resources Committee is also...
Transcript of HUMAN RESOURCES & STAFFING PLAN...institutional planning, the Human Resources Committee is also...
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HUMAN RESOURCES & STAFFING PLAN
Introduction
As a public educational agency, the Rancho Santiago Community College District is required to
comply with a myriad of statutes, regulations and accreditation standards with regard to its
human resources. These regulatory requirements and standards provide the framework for the
District’s human resources planning.
This human resources plan is designed to assist the District and its operational units to plan for
and effectively utilize its human resources.
Relationship to District and College Planning
The RSCCD Human Resources Committee is one of five participatory governance committees
that play an integral role in the district’s institutional planning process. The Human Resources
Committee is the participatory governance body that is responsible for the initial development,
review and evaluation of this Human Resources & Staffing Plan. In addition to its role in
institutional planning, the Human Resources Committee is also responsible for the initial review
of existing, modified, or new personnel policies and administrative regulations.
The District’s resource allocation model provides the three operational units, Santa Ana College,
Santiago Canyon College and District Services with the authority to determine its appropriate
staffing levels, assignments and organizational structures. Although the Board of Trustees is the
ultimate authority with regard to all human resource matters, significant authority is delegated to
the operational units through the Chancellor. Consequently, each of these operational units also
utilizes planning processes for its particular human resources and staffing needs.
Human resources administration is a centralized responsibility of District Services and
operational aspects such as recruitment, classification, labor relations, compensation and
employee benefits are managed centrally based upon the provisions of the applicable collective
bargaining agreements and board policy.
Staffing Levels
The following charts depict the changes in staffing by employee category district-wide and at the
operational units. These data are presented from the 2008/09 fiscal year to the present. The
Great Recession and subsequent state budget crisis had a significant effect on staffing in the
District. Through attrition, a hiring freeze and ultimately a reduction in force, the district
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intentionally reduced staffing at all locations as a cost-reduction strategy. As the economy has
recovered and state funding for community colleges improves, staffing levels are increasing but
are still below pre-recession levels.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 1A: RSCCD Total Staffing
FT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 1B: Santa Ana College
FT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
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0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 1C: Santiago Canyon College - Total Staffing
FT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 1 D: District Services - Total Staffing
FT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
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The following chart shows the District-wide change in the number of employees from 2008 to
2013. The chart shows that part-time employees (both classified and faculty) were the groups
most significantly impacted by the recession and state budget crisis. This reflected the District’s
strategy to protect full-time positions when possible.
All changes measured as of September 1st of each year.
Staff Diversity
The communities comprising the RSCCD are very diverse and the student bodies of both
colleges reflect that diversity. The district’s recruitment and selection procedures are designed to
attract a diverse pool of applicants for all job openings. On an annual basis, an analysis of the
ethnic diversity of the district’s workforce is conducted and reviewed by the Human Resources
Committee. The percentage of ethnically diverse (non-white) employees, by category and in
total, (as measured on September 1st of each year) are presented on the following charts.
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
MGMT 0% -5.7% -8.6% 0.9% -2.8% 4.8% 7.3%
FT FAC 0% -5.1% -3.5% 1.9% -2.7% 0.0% 3.9%
PT FAC 0% -1.1% -9.6% -12.1% 2.7% 9.4% 11.0%
FT CLAS 0% -7.1% -8.2% 0.9% -3.0% -0.4% 1.8%
PT CLAS 0% -29.5% -17.5% 1.3% -3.5% -1.4% -4.6%
TOTAL 0% -6.0% -9.3% -6.7% 0.2% 5.4% 7.3%
-35%
-30%
-25%
-20%
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
Ch
ange
fro
m P
revi
ou
s Y
ear
Chart 2: Year-to-Year Change in Employees--2008-2014
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0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 3A: RSCCD Faculty/Staff Diversity
FT Faculty
PT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
Total
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 3B: Santa Ana College - Faculty/Staff Diversity
FT Faculty
PT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
Total
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0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 3C: Santiago Canyon College - Faculty/Staff Diversity
FT Faculty
PT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
Total
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
120%
08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15
Chart 3D: District Services - Faculty/Staff Diversity
FT Faculty
FT Classified
PT Classified
Management
Total
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Despite the staff reductions during the 2008 – 2010 years (when a hiring freeze and a reduction
in force were imposed) overall staff diversity has remained fairly constant. Due to their smaller
size, the management and part-time classified employee cohorts have experienced more year-to-
year fluctuations than the larger cohorts.
Age Distribution and Turnover
The age distribution percentages for each employee group reveal a significantly younger cohort
of classified employees than all other groups. Part-time classified employees represent the
youngest age group, followed by the full-time classified employees. The management and full-
time faculty cohorts have a significantly higher percentage of employees over age 60 as
compared to the classified employee cohorts.
In terms of retirement eligibility, the minimum retirement age for most faculty and managers is
age 55. Although the minimum age for classified employees is age 50, retirement prior to age 55
is rare. Using age 55 as a measurement point, significant portions of all full-time employees are
currently eligible for retirement:
Management: 42%
Full-time faculty: 40%
Full-time classified: 29%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
Under 40 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65+
Chart 5: Age Distribution of Staff -- Fall 2014
Full-time Faculty
Full-time Classified
Part-time Classified
Management
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Management and Classified Turnover
Turnover data for classified and management employees are only presented for the last four
years due to the reduction in force that occurred in 2009. At that time, over 170 CSEA
bargaining unit and management positions were eliminated due to funding reductions imposed
by the state.
Since 2010, the turnover rate for managers has fluctuated from year-to-year while the full-time
classified turnover rate has remained the most consistent. Part-time classified turnover
significantly increased in 2013-14 and this employee group has the highest turnover ratio on a
consistent basis, which is typical of part-time employment in most industries. Management
turnover, due to the smaller size of that group, is more subject to annual fluctuations.
Full-time Faculty Turnover
Although the turnover ratio for full-time faculty is the lowest for all employee groups, the
terminations of full-time faculty must be continually monitored. California community college
districts are required to maintain a specific number of full-time faculty (known as the Faculty
0.00%
2.00%
4.00%
6.00%
8.00%
10.00%
12.00%
14.00%
16.00%
18.00%
20.00%
Management FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
Chart 5: District-wide Turnover Ratio
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Obligation Number--FON) as well as monitor the ratio of credit instruction provided each year
by full-time and part-time faculty (FT/PT ratio).
Each fall the district determines its compliance with the FON and reports that information to the
state Chancellor’s Office. Economic penalties are imposed on districts that fail to maintain the
FON, unless the state Board of Governors waives that requirement due to insufficient funding in
the state budget. The economic penalty for failing to maintain the FON in 2014 is $73,057 per
full-time position. As a result of the recession and the prolonged state budget crisis, compliance
with the FON was suspended for five years (2009 – 2013). In those years, districts could avoid a
financial penalty by maintaining or improving its ratio of credit instruction provided by full-time
faculty. RSCCD curtailed full-time faculty hiring during those years as a budget reduction
strategy and was able to increase its full-time teaching ratio due to state-imposed reductions in
course offerings, which largely impacted part-time faculty employment. The district’s
compliance with the FON during the past ten years is shown below.
The requirement to comply with the FON was restored for the 2014-15 academic year. The
district was required to hire thirteen additional faculty prior to this academic year, plus replace
any vacancies that occurred in the interim. The 2013-14 budget also contained 2% enrollment
growth, which was the first funding for enrollment growth in 5 years. Funded growth affects the
FON by requiring the district to increase the number of full-time faculty by the same percentage
of funded enrollment growth. Assuming a consistent 2% allocation for enrollment growth in
280
290
300
310
320
330
340
350
360
370
Fall 2005 Fall 2006 Fall 2007 Fall 2008 Fall 2009 Fall 2010 Fall 2011 Fall 2012 Fall 2013 Fall 2014
Obligation
Actual
Chart 6A: Full-time Faculty Hiring and FON -- 10 Year Trend
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each of the next ten years, the district’s FON will increase from 335 in 2014 to 394 by the Fall of
2022, as shown in the following chart.
Although the number of faculty retirements/terminations was low in 2013, the district has seen
an average of 14 faculty retirements/terminations per year during the preceding ten years. That
historical turnover rate, plus the estimated increases in the FON due to enrollment growth, will
require a significant level of full-time faculty recruitment and hiring each year. Based upon the
assumed turnover rate and enrollment growth, over 20 new faculty will need to be hired each
year in order to maintain compliance with the FON.
Full-time/Part-Time Faculty Ratio
The chart below shows the ratio of credit instruction taught by full-time and part-time faculty at
each college and district-wide for the previous ten years. Although the Education Code
established a goal in 1989 that 75% of credit instruction should be taught by full-time faculty, the
legislature has not provided any funding to increase that ratio since the early 1990s.
Consequently, the district’s full-time/part-time ratio has remained fairly consistent over the
years.
300
320
340
360
380
400
420
Fall 2014 Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017 Fall 2018 Fall 2019 Fall 2020 Fall 2021 Fall 2022 Fall 2023
Chart 6B: Estimated FON Based on 2% Annual FTES Growth
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However, one significant change over the previous ten-year period has been the full-time/part-
time ratio at each college. After the district converted from a single college to a multi-college
structure in 1997, a significant disparity in the full-time/part-time ratios between the two colleges
was identified. Full-time faculty hiring was increased at Santiago Canyon College in those years
and the ratios at the colleges have been fairly equalized. In 2013-14, the growth rate at Santiago
Canyon was significant higher than at SAC, which resulted in a decrease in the FT/PT ratio for
the current year.
Full-time Faculty Vacancies and Recruitment
Most full-time faculty resignations and retirements tend to occur at the end of the spring
semester each year. Each fall, the process to fill faculty vacancies begins. In September, the
state Chancellor’s Office notified the District of its projected FON obligation for the subsequent
year. The Human Resources Department identifies the number of existing full-time faculty
vacancies at each college as well as the number of new faculty positions that must be added in
order to maintain the FON. The district’s resource allocation model assumes that each college
will maintain its FON and will be responsible for its pro-rata share of the new faculty positions.
Full-time/Part-time Credit Faculty Ratios: 2005 -- 2014
SAC SCC Combined RSCCD FT PT FT PT FT PT
2005 64.01% 35.99% 2005 54.82% 42.51% 2005 62.07% 37.93%
2006 63.97% 36.03% 2006 55.74% 44.26% 2006 61.43% 38.57%
2007 63.16% 36.84% 2007 53.72% 46.28% 2007 60.20% 39.80%
2008 58.75% 41.25% 2008 54.24% 45.76% 2008 57.63% 42.37%
2009 62.17% 37.83% 2009 65.84% 34.16% 2009 63.30% 36.70%
2010 64.10% 35.90% 2010 61.60% 38.40% 2010 63.30% 36.70%
2011 66.73% 33.27% 2011 62.44% 37.56% 2011 65.32% 34.68%
2012 65.54% 34.46% 2012 65.36% 34.64% 2012 65.48% 34.52%
2013 62.95% 37.05% 2013 63.32% 36.68% 2013 63.07% 36.93%
2014 62.25% 37.75% 2014 56.77% 43.23% 2014 60.52% 39.48%
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Each college has a process, in consultation with its academic senate, to identify hiring priorities
by academic discipline. Each college president recommends a list of faculty vacancies to the
Chancellor and once approved, recruitment activities begin in the spring. The process concludes
prior to the end of the spring semester and the newly hired faculty typically begin work in the
subsequent fall semester.
Classified and Management Vacancies and Recruitment
Unlike faculty terminations, which typically coincide with the end of the academic year,
management and classified vacancies occur throughout the year and are filled at a time
determined by the college president or appropriate vice chancellor. When vacancies occur, the
existing position and job description should be reviewed to ensure that it is still accurate for the
needs of the department. Modifications to job descriptions, which don’t involve changes in pay
grade, are presented to the Board of Trustees prior to the initiation of recruitment activities.
Modifications which affect pay grade are handled through a reorganization process. For
positions at a college, the reorganizations are reviewed by the college participatory governance
council and recommended to the college president. Positions assigned to the district office are
reviewed by the District Council and recommended to the Chancellor. After this review process
is completed, the Human Resources Department reviews any modifications affecting bargaining
unit positions with CSEA. Following that review, modifications to job specifications or pay
grades are presented to the Board of Trustees for approval prior to the initiation of recruitment
activities. Recruitment activities for classified and management positions may be initiated at
any time during the year or may be postponed due to budgetary or other programmatic
considerations. In situations where recruitment is delayed, or where the vacancy disrupts
normal operations, existing staff may be placed in interim assignments or temporary employees
may be used to staff vacant positions. The use of temporary workers or existing staff in interim
assignments is subject to applicable restrictions in the Education Code, Title 5 regulations, or
applicable collective bargaining agreements.
50% Law Compliance
Education Code Section 84362 requires community college districts to expend 50% of the
district’s Current Expense of Education (CEE) on the salaries and fringe benefits of classroom
instructors. The “Current Expense of Education” (CEE) includes the General Fund operating
expenditures excluding expenditures for food services, community services, capital (except
equipment replacement), auxiliary services and other costs specifically excluded by law.
The “Salaries for Classroom Instructors” includes the salaries and fringe benefits for classroom
instructors and instructional aides (full-time and part-time). In the most recent fiscal year (2013-
14), the District’s compliance calculation was 50.18%, which was a slight increase over the prior
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year. Recognizing that most classified and management positions, as well as some faculty
positions (counselors, librarians and faculty released from teaching assignments), don’t meet the
definition of classroom instructors, the ability of the colleges and district services to increase
staffing levels in non-teaching areas will be constrained.
The 50% law calculation for the previous five years is presented below:
Staffing Allocations
The allocation of faculty and staff is controlled by each of the three major operational units
(Santa Ana College, Santiago Canyon College and District Operations). As described above,
each unit has a process for modifying or increasing its staffing. A number of functions (District
Safety, Information Technology, Auxiliary Services) are managed at the District Operations
level, but a significant number of staff assigned to those areas are actually housed on the college
campuses and continuing education sites. This difference in management responsibility and
staffing location is shown in the following two charts.
50.46%
50.54%
50.18%
50.09%
50.18%
49.80%
49.90%
50.00%
50.10%
50.20%
50.30%
50.40%
50.50%
50.60%
09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14
50% Law Compliance 2009 - 2014
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The following charts show the percentage of full-time and part-time classified staff assigned to
each location as well as the continuing education centers operated by each college.
District Office 28%
SAC 49%
SCC 23%
Chart 7A: Staff Allocation by Management Area
District Office 11%
SAC 57%
SCC 26%
Chart 7B: Staff Allocation by Location
District Office 18%
SAC 45%
CEC 9%
SCC 22%
OEC 6%
Chart 7C: Allocation of Full-time Classified Staff
District Office
2%
SAC 44%
CEC 29%
SCC 16%
OEC 9%
Chart 7D: Allocation of Part-time Classified Staff
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Although there is no definitive benchmark regarding the allocation of non-teaching support staff,
all staffing allocations should be viewed in the context of FTES generation, which is the standard
work-load unit for any community college district in California. The current breakdown of both
credit and non-credit FTES generation, by site, is presented below.
The FTES distribution between the colleges is one method to evaluate the overall staffing parity
between the sites. Although the overall distribution of faculty and support staff can be evaluated
based upon FTES percentages, the actual allocation of positions by department, area of specialty,
etc. vary based upon the programmatic and operational priorities at each site.
District Office 13%
SAC 45%
CEC 15%
SCC 20%
OEC 7%
Chart 7E: Allocation of All
Classified Staff
SAC 54%
CEC 16%
SCC 24%
OEC 6%
Chart 7F: 2013-14 FTES Distribution
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Planning Implications
In order to avoid economic penalties, maintenance of the FON must be a staffing priority
for each college.
Increases in non-instructional positions must be done in full consideration of the
implications for 50% law compliance.
Turnover, especially in faculty, management and key classified positions will require
succession planning, but will also provide opportunities for restructuring and adjustments
to staff allocations.
In the absence of significant cost-of-living adjustments or new sources of revenue,
funding for additional staff positions will be tied to funded FTES growth.
The colleges and district operations should evaluate staffing, structures and reporting
relationships in order to maximize efficiency and take advantage of economies of scale.
SAC 66%
CEC 4%
SCC 28%
OEC 2%
Chart 7G: Allocation of Full-time Faculty
SAC 52%
CEC 18%
SCC 23%
OEC 8%
Chart 7H: Allocation of Classified Staff
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DATA TABLES RELATED TO CHARTS 1 – 7
Charts 1A - 1D: Total Staffing
1A: RSCCD
FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management
08-09 394 550 390 123
09-10 374 511 275 116
10-11 361 469 227 106
11-12 368 473 230 107
12-13 358 459 222 104
13-14 358 457 219 109
14-15 372 465 209 117
1B: SANTA ANA COLLEGE
FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management
08-09 242 262 261 36
09-10 231 284 200 38
10-11 217 255 170 33
11-12 225 255 168 36
12-13 216 227 148 32
13-14 219 227 148 33
14-15 234 222 140 35
1C: SANTIAGO CANYON COLLEGE
FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management
08-09 110 116 82 25
09-10 104 125 61 26
10-11 102 117 48 25
11-12 105 120 54 22
12-13 102 106 50 19
13-14 102 103 49 23
14-15 104 114 52 24
1D: DISTRICT SERVICES
FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management
08-09 42 172 47 62
09-10 39 102 14 52
10-11 42 97 9 48
11-12 38 98 8 50
12-13 40 126 24 53
13-14 37 127 22 53
14-15 34 129 17 58
Data reflect employees in paid status as of September 1st of each year
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Chart 2: Year-to-Year Change in Employees
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
FT FACULTY -5.1% -3.5% 1.9% -2.7% 0.0% 3.9%
PT FACULTY -1.1% -9.6% -12.1% 2.7% 9.4% 11.0%
FT CLASSIFIED -7.1% -8.2% 0.9% -3.0% -0.4% 1.8%
PT CLASSIFIED -29.5% -17.5% 1.3% -3.5% -1.4% -4.6%
MANAGEMENT -5.7% -8.6% 0.9% -2.8% 4.8% 7.3%
TOTAL -6.0% -9.3% -6.7% 0.2% 5.4% 7.3%
Charts 3A - 3D: Faculty/Staff Diversity
3A: RSCCD Staff Diversity -- Percentage of Non-White Employees 2008 - 2014
FT Faculty PT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management Total
08-09 39% 38% 63% 74% 52% 47%
09-10 39% 38% 64% 76% 51% 46%
10-11 40% 37% 64% 77% 51% 46%
11-12 41% 36% 64% 75% 51% 46%
12-13 41% 34% 66% 77% 52% 46%
13-14 42% 38% 68% 78% 53% 47%
14-15 42% 39% 70% 78% 49% 47%
3B: SAC Staff Diversity -- Percentage of Non-White Employees 2008 - 2013
FT Faculty PT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management Total
08-09 36% 39% 68% 78% 53% 41%
09-10 37% 39% 67% 79% 45% 42%
10-11 37% 38% 69% 78% 42% 40%
11-12 38% 38% 69% 77% 42% 41%
12-13 38% 38% 70% 78% 44% 41%
13-14 40% 39% 72% 79% 39% 41%
14-15 41% 41% 73% 79% 37% 47%
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3C: SCC Staff Diversity -- Percentage of Non-White Employees 2008 - 2013
FT Faculty PT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management Total
08-09 30% 34% 65% 63% 44% 41%
09-10 28% 35% 65% 69% 46% 42%
10-11 28% 33% 61% 73% 48% 40%
11-12 31% 32% 62% 69% 45% 41%
12-13 30% 32% 63% 70% 53% 41%
13-14 30% 34% 65% 69% 61% 41%
14-15 30% 34% 68% 73% 54% 42%
3D: DO Staff Diversity -- Percentage of Non-White Employees 2008 - 2013
FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified Management Total
08-09 81% 54% 72% 55% 41%
09-10 82% 54% 64% 58% 42%
10-11 83% 55% 67% 58% 40%
11-12 82% 55% 75% 61% 41%
12-13 82% 61% 83% 57% 41%
13-14 86% 65% 91% 58% 41%
14-15 88% 67% 76% 47% 42%
Data reflect employees in paid status as of September 1st of each year
Chart 4: Employee Age Distribution
Under 40 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 65+ Over 55
15 17 19 17 20 23 6 49
Management 13% 15% 16% 15% 17% 20% 5% 42%
66 39 53 51 55 52 45 152
Full-time Faculty 18% 10% 14% 14% 15% 14% 12% 40%
120 70 65 78 62 49 24 135
Full-time Classified 26% 15% 14% 17% 13% 10% 5% 29%
99 22 23 19 22 16 20 58
Part-time Classified 45% 10% 10% 9% 10% 7% 9% 26%
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Chart 5: District-wide Turnover Ratio
Management FT Faculty FT Classified PT Classified
2010-11 13.21% 3.45% 6.18% 10.13%
2011-12 10.28% 3.34% 4.65% 10.43%
2012-13 4.81% 1.88% 6.75% 9.46%
2013-14 4.59% 5.30% 6.35% 17.81%
Data reflect effective date of hiring and terminations from July 1 - June 30 each year
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Chart 6A: Full-time Faculty Hiring and FON -- 10 Year Trend
Obligation Actual
Fall 2005 337 341
Fall 2006 332 362
Fall 2007 331 350
Fall 2008 333 336
Fall 2009 333 326
Fall 2010 332 312
Fall 2011 332 318
Fall 2012 330 315
Fall 2013 329 317
Fall 2014 335 334
Chart 6B: Estimated FON Based on 2% Annual FTES Growth
FON
2% of
Prior Year
Fall 2014 335
Fall 2015 342 6.7
Fall 2016 349 6.8
Fall 2017 356 7.0
Fall 2018 363 7.1
Fall 2019 370 7.3
Fall 2020 377 7.4
Fall 2021 385 7.5
Fall 2022 393 7.7
Fall 2023 400 7.9
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Chart 7A - 7H: Allocation of Permanent Staff
SAC Main CEC SAC Total SCC Main OEC SCC Total
Management 31 5 36 19 4 23
FT Classified 185 36 221 90 22 112
PT Classified 83 57 140 30 20 50
Total Mgmt &
Classified 299 98 397 139 46 185
FT Faculty 221 13 234 95 7 102
DO BWAY DO SAC DO CEC DO SCC DO OEC DO Total
Management 50 8 1 5 0 64
FT Classified 84 26 7 11 4 132
PT Classified 4 12 7 4 0 27
Total Mgmt &
Classified 138 46 15 20 4 223
FT Faculty 6 18 7 3 0 34